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LAS VEGAS — It was the sort of game where the numbers just jump out at you.

There’s the 110 points, of course. Which came on 61.5 percent shooting. There’s the 54-16 advantage in points scored from the inside. There’s the playing at a frantic pace and giving up just seven turnovers. But, mostly, it’s the 100 points.

No. 6/7 Nevada drilled a solid Massachusetts team, 110-87, Friday night in the championship game of the Las Vegas Holiday Invitational tournament at the Orleans Arena, improving to 6-0 on the season and showing that it is more than capable of winning away from Lawlor Events Center.

Five players scored in double-figures for Nevada, led by Caleb Martin’s career-high 29 points. He was 9-for-15 from the floor, including hitting six of his 10 3-point attempts. Tre’Shawn Thurman added 22 points, Cody Martin scored 18 — on 7-of-8 shooting — Jordan Caroline finished with 16 points and 10 rebounds, and Jazz Johnson scored 11 off the bench.

Caleb Martin, Thurman and Caroline were all named to the all-tournament team, with Martin being named the event’s MVP.

UMass dropped to 4-3. Luwane Pipkins, who took 21 of the Minutemen’s 62 shots, led all scorers with 30 points.

Here’s what we learned from Friday night’s fireworks, other than that the Orleans Arena scoreboard can, in fact, handle a third digit.

The parts are meshing

Nevada’s two tallest players, Trey Porter and Jordan Brown, combined for just 15 minutes and four points, but the Wolf Pack, as it has done all season, hardly seemed to miss a beat. Going at times with a smaller lineup, the Pack got important contributions from a number of players, including Johnson (5-of-6 from the field) and Corey Henson, who scored seven points in 20 minutes.

Those efforts complimented the huge games from Caroline, Thurman, and the Martin brothers, all of whom played at least 27 minutes.

“With the versatility offensively, I think we’re able to create mismatches,” Nevada head coach Eric Mussleman said. “Tonight was Tre Thurman’s time for the first 30 minutes, then he really didn’t play much down the stretch. We went to rest him and then ended up playing a bunch of guards.

“It was as good of an offensive performance as we’ve had in a long time.”

The 110 points was Nevada’s most since a 119-70 win over Fresno Pacific in 2015. It was also the most against a Division I opponent since early in the 2009 season, when the Wolf Pack beat Houston, 112-99.

How efficient? Very efficient

The Wolf Pack went to sleep Friday night as the nation’s top offensive team — at least according to one advanced metric.

Nevada was ranked first in adjusted offensive efficiency late Friday at KenPom.com, which rates the Pack as scoring 120.6 points per 100 offensive possessions (adjusted for opponent). The next four teams in the metric are a who’s-who of college basketball history — Duke, North Carolina, Gonzaga and Kansas.

Nevada’s raw efficiency rating, which does not take into account the opponent, was 127.4 points per 100 possessions, the third-best mark at the close of Friday’s games.

More tests coming

Nevada took care of business in its first games outside Lawlor Events Center, beating Tulsa and UMass by an average of 16.5 points to win the tournament title at the Orleans.

Next up is the Wolf Pack’s first true road game of the season — and it’s against a familiar opponent. Nevada plays Tuesday at Loyola Chicago, which edged the Pack out of last season’s NCAA Tournament, 69-68, in the Sweet 16.

“Loyola is going to be ready; we’ll be ready,” Musselman said. “They’re really well-coached, and it’ll be a hard environment to play in on the road.”

The Ramblers, 4-2, are coming off a 78-66 loss to Boston College on Wednesday.